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Dive into the research topics where Abdulhakim Ahmed is active.

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Featured researches published by Abdulhakim Ahmed.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2015

Multiple mantle upwellings in the transition zone beneath the northern East-African Rift system from relative P-wave travel-time tomography

Chiara Civiero; J. O. S. Hammond; Saskia Goes; Stewart Fishwick; Abdulhakim Ahmed; Atalay Ayele; Cécile Doubre; Berhe Goitom; Derek Keir; J.-Michael Kendall; Sylvie Leroy; Ghebrebrhan Ogubazghi; Georg Rümpker; G. W. Stuart

Mantle plumes and consequent plate extension have been invoked as the likely cause of East African Rift volcanism. However, the nature of mantle upwelling is debated, with proposed configurations ranging from a single broad plume connected to the large low-shear-velocity province beneath Southern Africa, the so-called African Superplume, to multiple lower-mantle sources along the rift. We present a new P-wave travel-time tomography model below the northern East-African, Red Sea, and Gulf of Aden rifts and surrounding areas. Data are from stations that span an area from Madagascar to Saudi Arabia. The aperture of the integrated data set allows us to image structures of 100 km length-scale down to depths of 700– 800 km beneath the study region. Our images provide evidence of two clusters of low-velocity structures consisting of features with diameter of 100–200 km that extend through the transition zone, the first beneath Afar and a second just west of the Main Ethiopian Rift, a region with off-rift volcanism. Considering seismic sensitivity to temperature, we interpret these features as upwellings with excess temperatures of 100 6 50 K. The scale of the upwellings is smaller than expected for lower mantle plume sources. This, together with the change in pattern of the low-velocity anomalies across the base of the transition zone, suggests that ponding or flow of deep-plume material below the transition zone may be spawning these upper mantle upwellings.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2014

Crustal and upper mantle structure beneath south-western margin of the Arabian Peninsula from teleseismic tomography

Félicie Korostelev; C. Basuyau; Sylvie Leroy; Christel Tiberi; Abdulhakim Ahmed; G. W. Stuart; Derek Keir; Frédérique Rolandone; Ismail Al Ganad; Khaled Khanbari; Lapo Boschi

We image the lithospheric and upper asthenospheric structure of western continental Yemen with 24 broadband stations to evaluate the role of the Afar plume on the evolution of the continental margin and its extent eastward along the Gulf of Aden. We use teleseismic tomography to compute relative P wave velocity variations in south-western Yemen down to 300 km depth. Published receiver function analysis suggest a dramatic and localized thinning of the crust in the vicinity of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, consistent with the velocity structure that we retrieve in our model. The mantle part of the model is dominated by the presence of a low-velocity anomaly in which we infer partial melting just below thick Oligocene flood basalts and recent off-axis volcanic events (from 15 Ma to present). This low-velocity anomaly could correspond to an abnormally hot mantle and could be responsible for dynamic topography and recent magmatism in western Yemen. Our new P wave velocity model beneath western Yemen suggests the young rift flank volcanoes beneath margins and on the flanks of the Red Sea rift are caused by focused small-scale diapiric upwelling from a broad region of hot mantle beneath the area. Our work shows that relatively hot mantle, along with partial melting of the mantle, can persist beneath rifted margins after breakup has occurred.


Geosphere | 2014

Uppermost mantle velocity from Pn tomography in the Gulf of Aden

Jordane Corbeau; Frédérique Rolandone; Sylvie Leroy; A. Al-Lazki; Anna L Stork; Derek Keir; G. W. Stuart; J. O. S. Hammond; Cécile Doubre; Jerome Vergne; Abdulhakim Ahmed; Khaled Khanbari

We determine the lateral variations in seismic velocity of the lithospheric mantle beneath the Gulf of Aden and its margins by inversion of Pn (upper mantle high-frequency compressional P wave) traveltimes. Data for this study were collected by several temporary seismic networks and from the global catalogue. A least-squares tomographic algorithm is used to solve for velocity variations in the mantle lithosphere. In order to separate shallow and deeper structures, we use separate inversions for shorter and longer ray path data. High Pn velocities (8.2–8.4 km/s) are observed in the uppermost mantle beneath Yemen that may be related to the presence of magmatic underplating of the volcanic margins of Aden and the Red Sea. Zones of low velocity (7.7 km/s) are present in the shallow upper mantle beneath Sana’a, Aden, Afar, and along the Gulf of Aden that are likely related to melt transport through the lithosphere feeding active volcanism. Deeper within the upper mantle, beneath the Oman margin, a low-velocity zone (7.8 km/s) suggests a deep zone of melt accumulation. Our results provide evidence that the asthenosphere undergoes channelized flow from the Afar hotspot toward the east along the Aden and Sheba Ridges.


Nature Communications | 2016

The initiation of segmented buoyancy-driven melting during continental breakup.

Ryan J. Gallacher; Derek Keir; Nicholas Harmon; G. W. Stuart; Sylvie Leroy; J. O. S. Hammond; J.-M. Kendall; Atalay Ayele; Berhe Goitom; Ghebrebrhan Ogubazghi; Abdulhakim Ahmed

Melting of the mantle during continental breakup leads to magmatic intrusion and volcanism, yet our understanding of the location and dominant mechanisms of melt generation in rifting environments is impeded by a paucity of direct observations of mantle melting. It is unclear when during the rifting process the segmented nature of magma supply typical of seafloor spreading initiates. Here, we use Rayleigh-wave tomography to construct a high-resolution absolute three-dimensional shear-wave velocity model of the upper 250 km beneath the Afar triple junction, imaging the mantle response during progressive continental breakup. Our model suggests melt production is highest and melting depths deepest early during continental breakup. Elevated melt production during continental rifting is likely due to localized thinning and melt focusing when the rift is narrow. In addition, we interpret segmented zones of melt supply beneath the rift, suggesting that buoyancy-driven active upwelling of the mantle initiates early during continental rifting.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Magmatism on rift flanks: Insights from ambient noise phase velocity in Afar region

Félicie Korostelev; Cornelis Weemstra; Sylvie Leroy; Lapo Boschi; Derek Keir; Yong Ren; Irene Molinari; Abdulhakim Ahmed; G. W. Stuart; Frédérique Rolandone; Khaled Khanbari; J. O. S. Hammond; J.-M. Kendall; Cécile Doubre; Ismail Al Ganad; Berhe Goitom; Atalay Ayele

During the breakup of continents in magmatic settings, the extension of the rift valley is commonly assumed to initially occur by border faulting and progressively migrate in space and time toward the spreading axis. Magmatic processes near the rift flanks are commonly ignored. We present phase velocity maps of the crust and uppermost mantle of the conjugate margins of the southern Red Sea (Afar and Yemen) using ambient noise tomography to constrain crustal modification during breakup. Our images show that the low seismic velocities characterize not only the upper crust beneath the axial volcanic systems but also both upper and lower crust beneath the rift flanks where ongoing volcanism and hydrothermal activity occur at the surface. Magmatic modification of the crust beneath rift flanks likely occurs for a protracted period of time during the breakup process and may persist through to early seafloor spreading.


Terra Nova | 2016

Magmatism at continental passive margins inferred from Ambient-Noise Phase-velocity in the Gulf of Aden

Félicie Korostelev; Sylvie Leroy; Derek Keir; Cornelis Weemstra; Lapo Boschi; Irene Molinari; Abdulhakim Ahmed; G. W. Stuart; Frédérique Rolandone; Khaled Khanbari; Ali Al-Lazki

Non-volcanic continental passive margins have traditionally been considered to be tectonically and magmatically inactive once continental breakup has occurred and seafloor spreading has commenced. We use ambient-noise tomography to constrain Rayleigh-wave phase-velocity maps beneath the eastern Gulf of Aden (eastern Yemen and southern Oman). In the crust, we image low velocities beneath the Jiza-Qamar (Yemen) and Ashawq-Salalah (Oman) basins, likely caused by the presence of partial melt associated with magmatic plumbing systems beneath the rifted margin. Our results provide strong evidence that magma intrusion persists after breakup, modifying the composition and thermal structure of the continental margin. The coincidence between zones of crustal intrusion and steep gradients in lithospheric thinning, as well as with transform faults, suggests that magmatism post-breakup may be driven by small-scale convection and enhanced by edge-driven flow at the juxtaposition of lithosphere of varying thickness and thermal age.


Geosphere | 2015

Upper mantle structure of the southern Arabian margin: Insights from teleseismic tomography

Félicie Korostelev; Sylvie Leroy; Derek Keir; Abdulhakim Ahmed; Lapo Boschi; Frédérique Rolandone; G. W. Stuart; Mathias Obrebski; Khaled Khanbari; Issa El-Hussain

We image the lithospheric and upper asthenospheric structure beneath the central and eastern parts of the northern Gulf of Aden rifted passive continental margin with 59 broadband stations to evaluate the role of transform fault zones on the evolution of magma-poor continental margins. We used teleseismic tomography to compute a relative P wave velocity model in eastern Yemen and southern Oman down to 400 km depth. Our model shows low-velocity anomalies located in the vicinities of five major fracture zones and regions of recent volcanism. These low-velocity anomalies are likely caused by localized asthenospheric upwelling and partial melting, caused by small-scale convection promoted by gradients in the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary topography near the fracture zones. In addition, low velocities underlie regions of elevated topography between major sedimentary basins. We suggest that locally buoyant mantle creates uplift and dynamic topography on the rift margin that affects the course of seasonal rivers and the sedimentation at the mouth of those rivers. Our new P wave velocity model suggests that the dynamic topography and recent volcanism in the central and eastern Gulf of Aden could be due to small-scale convection at the edge of the Arabian plate and/or in the vicinity of fracture zones.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Small-scale thermal upwellings under the Northern East African Rift from S travel-time tomography

Chiara Civiero; Saskia Goes; J. O. S. Hammond; Stewart Fishwick; Abdulhakim Ahmed; Atalay Ayele; Cécile Doubre; Berhe Goitom; Derek Keir; J.-Michael Kendall; Sylvie Leroy; Ghebrebrhan Ogubazghi; Georg Rümpker; G. W. Stuart

There is a long-standing debate over how many and what types of plumes underlie the East African Rift and whether they do or do not drive its extension and consequent magmatism and seismicity. Here we present a new tomographic study of relative teleseismic S and SKS residuals that expands the resolution from previous regional studies below the northern East African Rift to image structure from the surface to the base of the transition zone. The images reveal two low-velocity clusters, below Afar and west of the Main Ethiopian Rift, that extend throughout the upper mantle and comprise several smaller-scale (about 100 km diameter), low-velocity features. These structures support those of our recent P tomographic study below the region. The relative magnitude of S to P residuals is around 3.5, which is consistent with a predominantly thermal nature of the anomalies. The S and P velocity anomalies in the low-velocity clusters can be explained by similar excess temperatures in the range of 100–200°C, consistent with temperatures inferred from other seismic, geochemical, and petrological studies. Somewhat stronger VS anomalies below Afar than west of the Main Ethiopian Rift may include an expression of volatiles and/or melt in this region. These results, together with a comparison with previous larger-scale tomographic models, indicate that these structures are likely small-scale upwellings with mild excess temperatures, rising from a regional thermal boundary layer at the base of the upper mantle.


Arabian Journal of Geosciences | 2012

From rifting to oceanic spreading in the Gulf of Aden: a synthesis

Sylvie Leroy; Ph. Razin; Julia Autin; Felix Bache; Elia D'Acremont; Louise Watremez; Jean-Christophe Robinet; Celine Baurion; Yoann Denèle; Nicolas Bellahsen; Francis Lucazeau; Frédérique Rolandone; Stephane Rouzo; J. Serra Kiel; Cécile Robin; F. Guillocheau; Christel Tiberi; C. Basuyau; Marie-Odile Beslier; Cynthia Ebinger; G. W. Stuart; Abdulhakim Ahmed; Khaled Khanbari; I. Al Ganad; Ph. De Clarens; Patrick Unternehr; K. Al Toubi; A. Al Lazki


Tectonophysics | 2013

Pre-existing oblique transfer zones and transfer/transform relationships in continental margins: New insights from the southeastern Gulf of Aden, Socotra Island, Yemen

Nicolas Bellahsen; Sylvie Leroy; Julia Autin; Philippe Razin; Elia D'Acremont; Heather Sloan; R. Pik; Abdulhakim Ahmed; Khaled Khanbari

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Derek Keir

University of Florence

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Cécile Doubre

University of Strasbourg

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